The Man Behind The Curtain…

 | Aug 23, 2015 03:35AM ET

h3 Pay No Attention to the Man Behind the Curtain…

One of the advantages of starting out as a hedge fund-of-funds shop is that we happen to have a fair amount of expertise in evaluating asset managers of all stripes. And while we can’t put an exact number on the percentage of asset management firms that generate true alpha with any consistency, we do know that it’s a small percentage of the universe of available managers. Such a statement is hardly controversial as it relates to the mutual fund business, where scores of studies have, to one degree or another, demonstrated that fact. But when directed at hedge funds, there seems to be more resistance.

Merely running a hedge fund seems to confer upon the portfolio manager superior intellect, insight and skill — we hear he is a whiz of a wiz, if ever a wiz there was. With over 7,500 hedge funds in the HFR database alone, clearly that cannot be true. Even if we allow for the fact that a handful of the top hedge fund shops do have the resources to lure top talent away from the mutual fund industry, we’re talking about a fraction of the hedge fund universe, a number we’d put in the low single digits based on our experience. But do we have any proof that the average hedge fund is no better than the average mutual fund?

As , researchers Mila Getmansky of the University of Massachusetts Amherst, Andrew Lo of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Peter Lee of Lo’s firm AlphaSimplex Group, determined that due to well-known, self-reporting biases, hedge fund performance was overstated by a factor of two from 1996 through 2014. This brought the average annualized return down from 12.6% to 6.3%. Now, as we’ve written in the past, we are loath to draw any conclusions about the performance of “hedge funds” as a group. However, we couldn’t help but notice that the 6.3% average annualized return would fall almost exactly in the middle of the performance of all the major mutual fund category averages over the same time period. Scientific? Perhaps not. Compelling? We think so. Of course, we’d be remiss if we didn’t acknowledge that the mutual fund category averages also suffer from certain biases, as mentioned in our “Education” section below, but the big problem of self-reporting isn’t one of them.

Liquid alternatives are proliferating because they are valuable additions to the tool kits utilized by advisors when building robust portfolios. It is increasingly understood that many – not all – but many strategies traditionally run within hedge fund vehicles can be run seamlessly inside of ’40 Act funds. And in doing so, investors benefit from greater regulatory protection, greater transparency, greater liquidity and lower fees. Of course, we’re biased, so take a look behind the curtain and come to your own conclusions.

h3 Liquid Alts Corner/h3
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